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Germany and Ivory Coast Clash in High-Stakes World Cup Showdown

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Felix Nmecha

TORONTO — The top two nations in Group E butt heads at BMO Field on Saturday, as four-time world champions Germany face Ivory Coast on matchday two at the 2026 World Cup, with both sides arriving fresh off statement-making opening victories.

A 2-2 friendly draw was played out between these sides in their only previous encounter in November 2009, with Lukas Podolski scoring twice for Die Mannschaft, including a 90th-minute equalizer.

Germany’s Dominant Opening Statement

Germany recorded the biggest victory at this summer’s World Cup on matchday one, easing to an emphatic 7-1 win over tournament debutants Curaçao in Houston last Sunday. After Felix Nmecha netted a sixth-minute opener, Julian Nagelsmann’s side were stunned by a historic leveler midway through the first half from Curaçao, the World Cup’s smallest-ever nation by population.

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However, Die Mannschaft swiftly returned to their devastating ways, as Kai Havertz scored twice, while Nico Schlotterbeck, Jamal Musiala, Nathaniel Brown, and Deniz Undav all got their names on the scoresheet in a deserved triumph.

Only five World Cup games this century have seen a nation score seven or more goals, and three of those have been by Germany, who can secure top spot in Group E if they beat Ivory Coast and Ecuador fail to win their match against Curaçao.

A Strong Run, but Defensive Cracks

Germany heads into this weekend’s fixture boasting a 10-game winning streak across all competitions dating back to September 2025, scoring two or more goals in nine of those victories.

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However, the ninth-highest-ranked nation in the world have looked vulnerable at the back, conceding in four of their last five matches, while they have failed to keep a clean sheet in any of their last seven games at the World Cup since winning the 2014 final 1-0 against Argentina.

Ivory Coast’s Dramatic Opener

After failing to qualify for the 2018 and 2022 World Cups, Ivory Coast picked up all three points in their opening match at this summer’s tournament, leaving it late to beat Ecuador by a slender 1-0 scoreline last Monday. Ecuador smacked the woodwork three times but could not find a breakthrough, before substitute Amad Diallo netted a superb 90th-minute winner for the Elephants, ending the South American side’s 19-game unbeaten run stretched across a near two-year period.

Ivory Coast have now won at least one game at each of their four appearances at the World Cup and are in a strong position to progress to the knockout rounds for the first time in their history, needing at least a point from their remaining two games to all but secure a top-three finish.

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Emerse Fae’s side are one of only two African nations, along with Ghana, to win their opening group-stage game, and they will be looking to win their fifth match in a row across all competitions when they face Germany — a run that includes a 2-1 friendly victory over France a fortnight ago.

The Head-to-Head History

Ranked 30th in the world by FIFA, the Elephants have only won one of their previous four World Cup encounters against European opposition, with one draw and two losses, while Germany have been beaten just once by an African nation on the global stage across the same broader sample, with five wins and two draws.

Germany’s Likely Lineup

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Germany boss Julian Nagelsmann may consider handing a start to in-form Deniz Undav, who scored and registered two assists as a substitute against Curaçao, and has directly contributed to 11 goals — seven goals and four assists — in just 10 appearances for the senior national team.

However, a four-man attack of Leroy Sané, Jamal Musiala, Florian Wirtz, and Kai Havertz is likely to remain intact, with Havertz the only German player to score at each of the last four major tournaments, netting exactly twice in each.

At the age of 40, goalkeeper Manuel Neuer is the oldest ever German to play at a World Cup, and he is set to be protected by a four-man defense of Joshua Kimmich, Jonathan Tah, Nico Schlotterbeck, and Nathaniel Brown.

Germany’s possible starting lineup: Neuer; Kimmich, Tah, Schlotterbeck, Brown; Pavlovic, Nmecha; Sané, Musiala, Wirtz; Havertz.

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Ivory Coast’s Team News

As for Ivory Coast, Elye Wahi had been denied entry into Canada due to visa complications amid reports that he had been arrested on suspicion of match-fixing offenses. However, he has since been given travel authorization to enter Canada and could therefore feature on Saturday. Fae may consider replacing the Eintracht Frankfurt striker, though, with Ange-Yoan Bonny, Oumar Diakité, and Evann Guessand all pushing for a start in attack alongside Hoffenheim’s Bazoumana Touré.

Following his match-winning impact off the bench last time out, Diallo could replace Nicolas Pépé in the first XI. The Manchester United winger has scored six international goals since October last year, more than any other Ivory Coast player in that period.

Yan Diomande may therefore switch over to the left flank. Against Ecuador, the Liverpool-linked 19-year-old became the first player on record since 1966 to create five-plus chances, make five-plus tackles, win 10-plus duels, and have 10-plus touches in the opposition’s box in a single World Cup match.

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Ivory Coast’s possible starting lineup: Y. Fofana; Doué, Singo, Agbadou, Konan; Diallo, Kessié, S. Fofana, Diomandé; Bonny, Touré.

The Prediction

We say: Germany 3-2 Ivory Coast.

While Ivory Coast’s electric frontline possesses more than enough pace to puncture Nagelsmann’s vulnerable backline, the sheer creative depth of this Germany outfit should ultimately overwhelm their African counterparts. We expect a fast start from Die Mannschaft, who have scored first in nine of their last 10 internationals, and they should ultimately prevail following a breathless contest in Canada.

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What’s at Stake

Saturday’s match in Toronto carries significant implications for the top of Group E. A win for Germany, combined with a failure by Ecuador to beat Curaçao, would clinch top spot in the group for Die Mannschaft. For Ivory Coast, a strong result against one of the tournament’s traditional powerhouses would represent another significant step toward a maiden appearance in the knockout rounds, continuing the momentum built by their dramatic late winner against Ecuador in their opener.

With both sides riding extended winning streaks across all competitions heading into this clash — Germany’s 10-game run and Ivory Coast’s bid for a fifth consecutive victory — Saturday’s contest at BMO Field shapes up as one of the most compelling matchups of the tournament’s second round of group games, pitting a European heavyweight known for explosive attacking output against an African side that has shown both the resilience and firepower to compete with anyone in this group.

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People on the move: key North East appointments and promotions

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Business Live

Companies making announcements this week include: Dome, RWO, The Solan Connor Fawcett Family Cancer Trust and Stelrad Group

Dome is a project management and cost consultancy.

From left: Andy Horsman, director; Ross Hamilton, director; Jenny Robertson, senior project manager and Tom Borsoi, associate director.(Image: Dome)

Newcastle project and cost management consultancy Dome has made two senior appointments.

Tom Borsoi has become associate director and Jenny Robertson has become senior project manager, bringing additional leadership, technical expertise and sector knowledge to support Dome’s growing portfolio of projects and clients. Mr Borsoi brings more than 15 years’ experience having worked on major infrastructure and regeneration projects such as the refurbishment of the Tyne Bridge and regeneration of Northumberland.

Meanwhile Ms Robertson has seven years of project management experience, most recently from Northumberland County Council, where she played a key role in the regeneration of Blyth town centre and the delivery of a range of strategic capital projects.

Andy Horsman, a co-founder and director of Dome, said: “We are delighted to welcome Tom and Jenny to the team. Both bring a wealth of experience and expertise that will further strengthen our core service offering and support our continued growth.”

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RWO MC Ltd is based at Blezard Business Park.

Domenico Venuti who has come on board as technical director for RWO MC Ltd.(Image: RWO MC Ltd)

Engineering specialist RWO has appointment of Domenico Venuti as technical director.

Mr Venuti will support the development and delivery of the Seaton Burn-based company’s technical strategy while leading the commercial civils team. His responsibilities will include team development, growing the civils operation, and providing engineering leadership across complex design projects.

Mr Venuti brings more than 30 years of consultancy experience across South Africa, the Middle East, Canada, Europe and the UK, including expertise in major data centres, infrastructure, logistics, sports and residential developments.

Mr Venuti said: “I’ve worked across a wide range of complex infrastructure and development projects throughout my career, delivering solutions in a variety of international markets. RWO’s collaborative culture, ambitious plans and growing multi-disciplinary capability made it an exciting opportunity for me. I’m looking forward to supporting the team’s continued development, sharing knowledge and contributing to the delivery of high-profile projects across multiple sectors.”

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Team Solan was started by Mark Solan.

From left: Simon Davies, Mark Solan and Ryan Hudson.(Image: Team Solan)

The Solan Connor Fawcett Family Cancer Trust , known as Team Solan, has appointed two new trustees.

Ryan Hudson, founder of RGH Group, multi-business owner, investor and solutions coach, and Simon Davies, a senior finance professional who has played a key role in the growth of Crafter’s Companion, the international craft business founded by entrepreneur Sara Davies, have both joined the charity.

Their appointments, alongside the imminent arrival of Kim Nielson from Hewitt’s Solicitors as a further trustee, and the recent appointment of Michelle Atkinson as fundraising and development lead, come at a time of growing demand for the charity’s services and signal a confident step forward for an organisation that has raised more than £2m and regularly supported around 500 cancer warriors since its founding in 2015.

Mark Solar, the founder of the charity, said: “When I started Team Solan 10 years ago, it was just me, a cause I believed in and a community that got behind us. Since then, we’ve raised more than £2m and changed thousands of lives, but the job is nowhere near done. To reach more people affected by cancer, we need to be smarter and stronger as an organisation. Ryan, Simon, Kim and Michelle all bring fresh expertise that will help us do exactly that and I’m genuinely excited about what we’re going to achieve together.”

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Radiators maker Stelrad Group plc has appointed Stuart Watson as independent non-executive director and audit and risk committee chair.

Mr Watson will also be appointed as a member of the Newcastle-based firm’s remuneration committee and nomination committee. He has extensive board experience across a range of sectors, including manufacturing, transport, software and logistics.

He is currently non executive director and audit committee chair of Vp plc, and non executive director and audit committee chair of Flowtech Fluidpower plc. Mr Watson is a chartered accountant and was previously a senior partner at Ernst & Young LLP, specialising in audit.

Martyn Coffey, chair of Stelrad said: “I am delighted to welcome Stuart to the board and look forward to his contribution to support the delivery of the group’s strategy. Stuart brings significant financial and accounting experience, and the Board is confident that he will provide strong leadership of the audit and risk committee.”

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Jio IPO: Meta, Google among 10 global investors that backed billionaire Mukesh Ambani’s digital giant

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Jio IPO: Meta, Google among 10 global investors that backed billionaire Mukesh Ambani’s digital giant
As Jio Platforms marches towards what is expected to be one of India’s biggest stock market debuts, the company’s draft red herring prospectus (DRHP) has offered a glimpse into the roster of global investors that backed billionaire Mukesh Ambani‘s digital ambitions years before the IPO.

While Reliance Industries remains firmly in control with a 66.43% stake, the shareholder register reads like a who’s who of global technology, private equity and sovereign wealth investors, including Meta, Google, Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund, KKR, Vista Equity Partners, Mubadala, General Atlantic, ADIA and TPG.

What makes the IPO particularly noteworthy is that none of these investors are selling shares in the offering. Jio’s proposed IPO consists entirely of a fresh issue of 27 crore shares, meaning the proceeds will flow directly to the company rather than existing shareholders.

Also read: Jio IPO: Spectrum acquisition, among 7 risks investors need to know about India’s largest offer

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Among external investors, Meta affiliate Jaadhu Holdings is the largest shareholder with a 9.98% stake, owning 892.3 million shares. Google International LLC follows with a 7.73% holding comprising 690.9 million shares.


The next tier of investors includes Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund, KKR-backed Omicron Asia Holdings II and Vista Equity Partners-backed VEPF VII AIV I, each holding 2.31% stake in the company.
Singapore-based SLP Redwood Holdings owns 1.88%, while Mubadala’s MIC Redwood 1 RSC holds 1.85%. General Atlantic Singapore JP owns 1.34%, followed by Abu Dhabi Investment Authority-backed Platinum Jasmine A 2018 Trust with 1.16%. TPG-managed India Markets Pte. Ltd. rounds out the top shareholder list with a 0.93% stake.The absence of an offer-for-sale means these investors are choosing to remain invested even as Jio enters the public markets. Instead of providing an exit to existing shareholders, the IPO is aimed at strengthening the company’s balance sheet and funding future growth.

What will Jio do with IPO proceeds?

According to the DRHP, Jio plans to use Rs 27,500 crore from the issue proceeds to prepay borrowings at Reliance Jio Infocomm, its key telecom subsidiary, with the balance earmarked for general corporate purposes.

The filing marks a significant milestone for Reliance Industries, nearly six years after Jio Platforms attracted more than Rs 1.5 lakh crore from global strategic and financial investors. Those backers are now set to become shareholders in a publicly listed company without reducing their stakes through the IPO.

Read more: RIL AGM: Jio listing soon, but anybody’s guess on Reliance Retail IPO. Here’s what Mukesh Ambani said

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Jio in numbers

The listing comes at a time when Jio’s operating performance remains strong. For FY26, Jio Platforms reported a consolidated net profit of Rs 30,064 crore on revenue from operations of nearly Rs 1.47 lakh crore. In wireless broadband, the company held a 49.95% market share as of March 31, according to the DRHP.

Jio continued to dominate India’s wireless broadband market with a 49.95% share as of March 31, according to its DRHP. Bharti Airtel followed with 35.13%, while Vodafone Idea and BSNL held 12.65% and 2.24%, respectively. The company said it serves 1.4 times more 4G and 5G subscribers than its nearest rival and added about 27 million net active mobility customers in FY26, nearly three times the additions recorded by the second-largest player.

Reliance Industries Chairman Mukesh Ambani said Jio’s proposed IPO would unlock significant value for existing shareholders while offering a compelling investment opportunity to new investors. The issue comprises a fresh issue of up to 27 crore shares.

Speaking at Reliance’s 49th Annual General Meeting, Ambani described the listing as an emotional milestone for the group and its shareholders. “The relationship Reliance shares with its shareholders is founded on pride, trust, respect and shared growth,” he said, adding that the IPO would demonstrate India’s ability to build technology companies with global scale, capabilities and value.

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Ambani also highlighted Jio’s evolution from a telecom operator into a technology creator. “Before Jio, many believed that India could only import technology from the world. Our engineers proved otherwise. Today, Jio is not merely integrating technology. It is creating original technology,” he said, crediting thousands of Indian engineers for driving the company’s growth.

He further said that Reliance Jio Infocomm Chairman Akash Ambani, Reliance Retail Ventures Executive Director Isha Ambani Piramal and Reliance Industries Executive Director Anant Ambani will lead the IPO process.

(Disclaimer: Recommendations, suggestions, views and opinions given by the experts are their own. These do not represent the views of The Economic Times)

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SharonAI Holdings: Two Billion In Contracts, One Quarter Of Proof

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SharonAI Holdings: Two Billion In Contracts, One Quarter Of Proof

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Beth Mooney Retires Hurt as Australia Crush Netherlands by 98 Runs at T20 World Cup

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Australia Cruises to Victory Over Netherlands as Beth Mooney Injury

SOUTHAMPTON, England — Beth Mooney smashed a half-century but retired hurt as Australia completed a comfortable 98-run victory over the Netherlands to maintain their unbeaten start to the Women’s T20 World Cup.

The Scorecard

Mooney top-scored with 74 off 42 balls while Ash Gardner struck 58 off 32 and Georgia Wareham crashed an 18-ball 41 as Australia piled on 219-6, equaling the highest total at a Women’s T20 World Cup — a mark set by England against Sri Lanka earlier in the tournament. The Netherlands fell well short in reply, finishing at 121-3 after their 20 overs, as Australia secured the comprehensive win.

Mooney’s Injury Scare

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Mooney’s afternoon ended prematurely after she pulled up while running between the wickets late in her innings. She pulled up after running two at the end of the 14th over and immediately left the field. She did not return to keep wicket due to back stiffness, adding a fresh injury concern for Australia just as the tournament reaches its business end.

With emergency wicketkeeper Phoebe Litchfield also absent due to a quad injury, Georgia Voll took the gloves in Mooney’s place. The 22-year-old was quickly involved, moving sharply across first slip to remove Phebe Molkenboer in the second over of the Netherlands innings, as Kim Garth struck twice in the powerplay to restrict the Netherlands to 27-2 after six overs.

An Already Stretched Australian Squad

Mooney’s injury adds to a growing list of fitness concerns that had already complicated Australia’s planning heading into the match. Litchfield’s injury was a curveball for Australia’s back-up wicketkeeper plans for the tournament, after they opted against naming a second full-time keeper in their 15-player squad alongside Mooney. NSW’s Tahlia Wilson is traveling with the squad as a reserve but could only be called in if another player was ruled out of the tournament entirely.

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Gardner herself had only just returned to the side after missing the previous match against Bangladesh with a sprained ankle. Australia are waiting to make a call on Ashleigh Gardner’s availability for Saturday’s match after the all-rounder made a promising return to training on the eve of the fixture, training strongly at The Rose Bowl’s nursery ground on Friday. Ellyse Perry, discussing Gardner’s chances of playing, said before the match: “I think Ash is tracking really well. I think she got through what she needed to today. So, yeah, at this stage it looks good, but I’m sure there’ll be a few more things to assess before tomorrow’s match.”

A Dutch Fight That Fell Short

Despite the lopsided final margin, the Netherlands did not go down without a fight, with their captain delivering a milestone individual performance even in defeat. Netherlands captain Babette de Leede scored an unbeaten half-century of 56 off 57 balls in her 100th T20I appearance and shared a determined 96-run partnership with Sterre Kalis, who made 44 off 43 balls. Despite that resistance, Australia’s total was always out of reach for the Dutch side.

How Australia’s Innings Unfolded

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Australia’s batting effort was built on a rapid start and several key partnerships throughout the innings. Mooney and Voll flew out of the blocks to bring up Australia’s 50 inside five overs before Iris Zwilling and Heather Siegers struck in quick succession to remove Voll and Ellyse Perry before the end of the powerplay.

The recovery and acceleration that followed came largely through the middle order. Mooney combined with Gardner, returning from her sprained ankle, for a 101-run third-wicket stand off 55 balls. Gardner departed two balls after Mooney, holing out to Kalis in the deep, but although wickets fell regularly in the final five overs, Wareham’s 41-run cameo, which included eight fours, powered Australia beyond 200.

Where Australia Stands in the Tournament

The victory keeps Australia firmly in contention near the top of their group as the tournament progresses. Heading into the match, Australia Women sat comfortably in second place in the Group 1 standings with a perfect record of two wins from two games, boasting a massive net run rate of plus 3.875 — a record they extended further with Saturday’s dominant performance.

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A Difficult History With Injuries

Mooney’s latest fitness scare continues what has been a recurring theme throughout her career, with the wicketkeeper-batter having previously dealt with more serious injuries that sidelined her for extended stretches. Mooney has previously missed a Women’s Ashes series after sustaining a fractured jaw during a training session, an injury that required surgery and also threatened her availability for a subsequent 50-over World Cup. She has also been forced off the field with a knee injury during a Women’s Premier League debut in India.

Given that history, Australia’s medical staff will likely monitor her back stiffness closely in the coming days as the tournament moves toward its knockout stages, particularly given the absence of a true like-for-like backup wicketkeeper currently available within the touring squad beyond the injured Litchfield.

What Comes Next

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With Australia having now further stretched their unbeaten run in the tournament, attention turns to the severity of Mooney’s back issue and whether she will be fit to keep wicket in the team’s upcoming fixtures. Given that Australia chose not to carry a second specialist wicketkeeper in their 15-player squad, any extended absence for Mooney would force the team to continue relying on makeshift solutions behind the stumps, as it did Saturday when Georgia Voll stepped in and immediately made an impact with the early wicket of Molkenboer.

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InvestingPro’s Fair Value flagged Array Digital’s 45% decline

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Spanish PM’s wife must stand trial on corruption charges, judge rules

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Free shares! NSE IPO DRHP reveals curious case of 5,000 shares landing in wrong demat account

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Free shares! NSE IPO DRHP reveals curious case of 5,000 shares landing in wrong demat account
As the National Stock Exchange’s IPO grabs headlines for its size and significance, two lesser-known disclosures buried in the draft red herring prospectus (DRHP) offer a glimpse into legal matters that prospective investors may find noteworthy.

One of them revolves around 5,000 NSE shares that the exchange alleges were erroneously credited to an individual’s demat account, triggering both civil and criminal proceedings.

According to the DRHP, NSE and Nuvama Wealth Finance filed a civil suit before the Delhi High Court against Kashmiri Lal Rana and NSDL in May 2025, alleging that 5,000 NSE shares were mistakenly transferred to Rana’s demat account on December 28, 2023, despite no corresponding purchase request or consideration being paid.

The exchange alleged that before the error was discovered, Rana had already sold 3,685 of those shares. NSE and Nuvama have sought a declaration that the transfer was void, recovery of Rs 1.43 crore representing the sale proceeds of the shares allegedly sold, and the return of the remaining shares.

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Also read: NSE IPO: Nithin Kamath explains why India has few businesses like this ‘cash generating machine’


The dispute became more complicated after NSE’s 4:1 bonus issue in November 2024. The remaining 1,315 shares were entitled to 5,260 bonus shares. According to the DRHP, the Delhi High Court directed Rana not to sell or transfer the remaining shares, while NSDL was directed not to transfer the bonus shares during the pendency of the suit.
The exchange said Rana has denied the claims in his written statement, while the plaintiffs have filed a replication relying on what they describe as his admissions. The matter remains pending.

The Mauritius case

Separately, NSE disclosed that it had filed a criminal complaint against Rana. A first information report was registered in July 2025 at Mumbai’s Bandra-Kurla Complex Police Station alleging offences related to criminal breach of trust and cheating. According to the filing, NSE alleged that Rana knowingly retained the erroneously credited shares and sold 3,685 of them for Rs 1.327 crore. The matter remains pending.
Another legal matter disclosed in the DRHP relates to a petition filed before the Bombay High Court in May 2026 by an individual named Parinay Sharma against SEBI and NSE.

According to the filing, Sharma had earlier submitted a representation to SEBI alleging that certain investors in NSE had invested through Mauritius-based entities instead of direct investments and that beneficial ownership details of certain foreign shareholders had not been disclosed.

Read more:
NSE IPO: BSE hosts double the listed companies but numbers tell a different story

The petition alleged that SEBI had not acted on the representation and sought, among other reliefs, a direction requiring NSE to disclose its promoter group and shareholders or ultimate beneficiaries along with KYC documents. The petitioner also sought a stay on NSE’s IPO process until the matter is finally decided. The DRHP states that the matter is currently pending before the court.

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The NSE IPO is entirely an offer-for-sale (OFS) of up to 14.89 crore equity shares with a face value of Re 1 each, representing nearly 6% of NSE’s paid-up equity capital. The issue size has been fixed at 6% of the exchange’s paid-up capital.

NSE’s shares will be listed on BSE, mirroring the arrangement under which BSE‘s own shares are listed on NSE. With NSE’s valuation in the unlisted market hovering around Rs 5 lakh crore, market estimates suggest the IPO could be sized at roughly Rs 30,000 crore.

The filing marks the culmination of a listing process first initiated in December 2016, when NSE filed its first DRHP for a Rs 10,000-crore issue. The process was subsequently stalled due to the co-location controversy.

(Disclaimer: Recommendations, suggestions, views and opinions given by the experts are their own. These do not represent the views of The Economic Times)

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Israeli fire kills five people in Gaza, including a child, medics say

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Israeli fire kills five people in Gaza, including a child, medics say


Israeli fire kills five people in Gaza, including a child, medics say

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Money Box – Pension delays and fraud figures

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Money Box - Pension delays and fraud figures

Available for over a year

Capita chiefs promised MPs on the Public Accounts Committee it would fix long-running problems with its administration of one of the biggest pension schemes in the country by the end of this month.
Tens of thousands of retired and serving civil servants have been reporting long delays to payments, leading to serious financial hardship to pensioners and their families. 
But Money Box has learned the deadline isn’t likely to be met. We speak to the chairman of the Public Accounts Committee about what happens next.
And cases of reported are still increasing. We explain how AI has become the latest weapon in the fraudsters’ armoury.
Also, holiday season is upon us. What can we do to minimise the hit from those annoying non-sterling transaction fees levied every time we use our plastic. A consumer expert shares his advice.

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